Document details

Meeting species persistence targets under climate change: a spatially-explicit conservation planning model

Author(s): Alagador, Diogo ; Cerdeira, Jorge O.

Date: 2020

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/28006

Origin: Repositório Científico da Universidade de Évora

Subject(s): Biogeography Conservation; Decision Suopport Tools; Mixed Integer Programming; Reserve design; Risk Analysis; Spatial optimization


Description

Aim Climate change threatens the effectiveness of existing protected areas, pivotal, yet static, instruments to promote the persistence of biodiversity. The identification of the areas more likely to be used by multiple species to track their most suitable changing climates is therefore an important step in conservation planning. Species persistence targets and budget limitation are two critical ingredients constraining target‐based conservation area selection. However, defining adequate persistence targets under budget constraints is far from intuitive. Location Unspecific. Methods We propose a two‐staged mixed‐integer linear programming model to determine optimized persistence targets for several species, for a given time horizon and climate change scenarios, under budgetary limitation. The first stage tunes pre‐established targets for each species with a bound on the size of the area to select. The second stage identifies a set of areas of minimum cost that allows the persistence levels optimized in the first stage to be achieved. We apply a heuristic to test whether small deviations from optimal persistence settings (i.e., targets for multiple species) do influence cost‐effectiveness of final solutions. Analyses were undertaken using a synthetic data set replicating changes of environmental suitability for several simulated species using several experimental designs. Results Our results showed that minor differences to the optimal persistence scores can result in large contraction of cost‐effectiveness in final solutions. Main conclusions Persistence targets should be carefully assessed case by case, and alternative species persistence settings should be considered, as they potentially result in important reductions of cost‐effectiveness. Our model along with the respective heuristic can be used as a tool to efficiently promote species persistence under climate change.

Document Type Journal article
Language English
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